The Dallas new era. (Dallas, Paulding County, Ga.) 1898-current, July 13, 1905, Image 1

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SDaUfts Devoted to tHo UpbuTldlnv and Progreas of Dallas and Paulding County. VOL. XXIII. Oaliiiarv l'nuiiiinj, c Dallas, Paulding County, Georgia, Thursday, July 13, 1905 Number 34 Wm.S Witham, J re8i ‘ W. E. Spinks, V-Pres. R. D. Leonard, Cashier. President. THE BANK OF PALLAS t ESTABLISHED 1899. A DESIGNATED STATE DEPOSITORY. Capital Stock .. . .$25,000.00 Undivided profits ... .... 8,000.00 Total ... .$33,000.00 Begin to practice right now what you are preaching— “economy." Start a bunk account. Do It today. Delay means loss. You will never start earlier. No time like now. Grasp the opportunity. Begin saving your money and dcposi.lng it in the bank. It docs not take much to start a bank account. A bank account, however small it mny be at the be- ginning, will grow, and you will be surprised how it will run up in a year’s time. We have seen it tried. All large fortunes had small beginnings. With your money in your home you run the risk of be ing robbed. Wllb it in your pocket you are tempted on every hand to spend it. Willi It In the Bank of Dallas you will be protected from robbery by hurgular insurance. With it in the Bank of Dallas, when you are tempted to spend it, you will do without rather than go to the bank and withdraw it. It adds to a man’s standing to have a bank account. People look up to a man who draws checks to pay his ob ligations. It gtves him tone in the business world and helps 1ns credit. Parents, start a bank account for yonr little baby at once. Deposit BOc to the credit of the little one, and ev ery few days add to the little account in the bank tie price of half a dozen cigars. You will marvel at the growth of tho account. By the time the child Is sixteen years old you will have saved more than enough to send him to college, or enough to start him in business. Start the eld'd right, Teach it to know the value of a dollar. Open an account for it. The Bank of Dallas makes a specialty of taking care of money deposited. It has thrown around its depositors every safeguard known to the bunking business. It even insures the money deposited—something unheard of until recently. The Bank of Dallas 1b your bank, a home institution; It’s officers are your people and conics to you today offer ing to takefcare of your money, to lend you money at nil times on approved paper, anil to otter you every courtesy that is in accord with sound banking principles. Home Circle Column. Crude Thoughts as They Fall From the Editorial;Pen.—Pleas, ant Evening Reveries, s s t t $5,000 Reward will be paid to any person who can find one atom of opium, chloral, morphine, cocaine, ether or chloroform in any form in any of Dr. Miles’ Remedies. This reward is offered because certain unscrupulous persons make false statements about these remedies. It is under stood that this reward applies only to goods purchased in the open market, which, have not been tampered with in any way. Dr. Miles’ remedies cure by their soothing, nourishing, strengthening and invigorat ing effects upon the nervous system, and not by paralyzing and weakening the nerves as would be the case if these drugs were used. For this reason Dr. Miles* Anti-Pain Pills are universally considered the best pain remedy **I hate Buffered for 26 years with ; severe pains In my head, heart and ' hack, and have tried everything I could set and could not find any relief •until I aot a box of Dr. Miles 7 Anti- Pain Pills. I suffered as long as 12 hours at a time with such sever® pains that I feared I would lose my mind. The Anti-Pain Pills grave me relief In from 10 to 20 minutes. I do not have to use Morphine any more. I wish you would publish this so that other sufferers mny find relief.” I. A. WALKER, R. P. I>. No. «. Salem. Ind. Dr. MIIbs’ Antl-Paln Pills ars sold by your druggist, who will guarantee that the first package will oentfit. If It falls he will return your money. 28 doses, 26 cents. Nsvar sold In bulk. Miles Medicil Co., Elkhart, Ind Easy Pill Easy to taka and egiy to act I* d that famous little pill DeWltt'a _ Little Early Risers. This is| due to the fact that they tonic the liver in stead of purging it. They never gripe nor sicken, not even the most delicate lady, and yet they are so certain in result* the! no one who uses them is disappointed. They cure torpid liver, constipation, biliousness, jaundice, headache, malaria and ward off pnau- monia and fevers. nir«IID OMLT av S. e. DeWITT * CO., CHICAOO } Dm'I F$rg$t th$ Mam*. 4 Early Risers For sale by A. J. Cooper fc Co. CLUBBING BATES. The New Era and Allantu Daily Joun- nal (both papers) one year for $5.00 The New Era and Atlanta Daily News (both papers) one year for $4.00 The New Era and the Twice-a-Week Atlanta Journal (both papers) one year for $1.25 The New Era and Tom Watsons Maga zine, 128 page., (both papers) one year for $1.50 The New Era and the Twice-a-Week Globe-Democrat (both papers) one year lor $1.40 For further information call on or address, THE NEW ERA, Dallas, Ga. A. Sf. CL Conncellor-At-Law, DALLAS, - - - GA; The administration of estates in court of ordinary a specialty. Will practice also in Superior and U. 8. courts. Dr- W. O. Hitchcock, Physician and Surgeon. DALLAS GA. Office: JJp stairs over Hitchcock A Camp’s store. The path of life runs so crooked that we cannot see around the curves. ooo The home is the place where all the joys of life may exist in their ripest fruition. ooo The leaving of home is an ex perience in one’s liie freighted with momentous consequence. ooo Mother! your life is not insig nificant. It is not and cannot be isolated from universal signifi cance, for your boy shall bear it into the great tide that never ebbs. ooo Evefy soul in the universe lives alone. There is a dark curtain dropped before the windows of the house which hides it from the view of all. Everyone has fell this loneliness even in the midst of crowds. ooo Without a fireside, man’s do mestic nature, from which lie de rives bv l'ar the largest amount of his earthly enjoyment, cannot but remain cold and almost en tirely inactive. The department of his nature can be kept alive only by the best of the hearth stone. OOO There is something grand and inspring in a young man who fails squarely, after doing his level best and then enters the contest again and again with un daunted courage and redoubled energy. We have no fears for the youth who is not dishearten ed at failure. OOO The world, it is said, is always looking for men who are not for sale; men who are honest, sound from center to circumference, true to the hearts core; men whose consciences are as steady as the needle to the pole; men who will stand for the right if the heavens totter and the earth reels; men who can tell the truth and look the world and the devil right in tho eye; men that nei ther brag nor run; men that nei ther Hag nor dinch; men who can have courage without shouting to it; men in whom the courage of everlasting life runs still, deep and strong; m#n who know their message and tell it; men who know their places and-dll them; men who know their own business and attend to it; men who will not lie, shirk or dodge; men who are not too lazy to work, not too proud to be poor; men who are willing to eat what they have earned and what they have paid for; men who are not afraid to say “No” with emphasis, and who are not ashamed to say “1 can’t afford it.” We have a large number of boys growing up in this community who will make just such men and also not a tew who will make the opposite. Young man, in which class shall we register your name? OOO ABUSK OF PUBLIC TBUST8. Our daily papers are now filled with details of corruption in pub lic places. The most prominent men of the land are being tried for abuses and “graft.” The- cities of Philadelphia and Chi cago are just now furnishing us some object lessons. Young men who read the daily papers will naturally think that to be a lead er of men one has to be corrupt. Such is not the case. There is not a land on earth which has so many moral men in authority as this land. There is not a session of a legislation or congress but in it are thoroughly good and hon est men—men whoso lingers never touched a bribe, whose cheeks has never been Unshed with in toxication, whose tongue has never been smitten of blasphemy or stung of a lie. Those times are not half so bad as times that are gone. We know this from the fact that Aaron Burr, a man tilled with iniquity until he could hold no more, was a mem ber of tho legislature, then at torney-general, then a sonatjr of tho United States, then vice- president and then came within one vote of the highest position in this nation. More than a half a century ago the governor of New York had to adjourn the legislature because it was too corrupt to sit in council. There is a tendency at the present time to extort the past to the disad vantage of the present, and we have a right to think, taking the past as/ii guide, that sixty years from now there may l>o persons who will represent some of us as angels, although now things are so unpromising and wo see much corruption in high places. But the evils of the past are no ex cuse for the public wickedness of today. Those of us who oc cupy editorial chairs should not hold back the truth. If we keep back the truth what will we do in the diy when the Lord rises up in judgment and we are tried not only for what we have said, but for what we have declined to say. When we open up the scroll of public wickedness we And incom petent men in ollice. It is no sin to be ignorant of medicine hut if ignorant of medicnl science it is a sin to place yourself among professional men and trifle with the lives of others. Our states men are more wise than in form er years. At one time in the congress of the United States a tariff was placed upon linseed oil and another tariff upon flax- seeJ oil, and those wise congress men did not know that they were both one and the same oil. We have had and still have a few in our legislature, who did not know whether to vote yes or not until they received the sign from their leader. Incompetency in office is one of the greatest crimes of this day, but we are improv ing. The senators who are more celebrated for their drunkenness than for their statesmanship are dead or compelled to stay at home. Bribery is cursing this land. Some of the finest houses of our cities are built out of money paid for votes in the leg islature. But with all the rot tenness that exists we are grow ing better and if the mothers of this land will spend more even ings with their sons than they do at clubs, and read to them the H^me Circle Column in this pap er, and other good reading mat ter, we may look for greater im provements in the moral stand ing of our great leaders in every walk of life. JOININQ IN THE CHASE. flood for Stomach Trouble and Con stipation. “Chamberlain's stomach and liver tab lets have done me a great deal of good, says C. Towns, of Hat Portage, Ontario, Canada. “Being a mild physic the after effects are not unpleasant, and I can re commend them to ail who suffer from stomach disorder." For sale by A. J. Cooper. The times are ripe for refor 11 in governmental affairs. This is true whether the reference be made to the municipality, the state or the nation itself. There is something in the very atmosphere which tells of re form and of, the power of pub lic opinion for sane and safe and wholesome government, says the Monroe Advertiser. Perhaps the most striking figure in the country at the present moment, not even ex cepting the president himself, is Mayor John Weaver of the city of Philadelphia. Him self a foreign born citizen^, a practical politician, the nomi nee of a ring and the executive of the most graft cursed city in the land, he has risen equal to the emergency. He has not only renounced his allegi ance to the ring and declared his divotion hereafter to good government, but he has fur ther annihilated, at least for the time being, the Phila delphia ring of grafters. And in other cities the spirit of re form is spreading. Our govenors, too, are re formers these days. Whether elected as democrats or re publicans, as ring politicians or as statesmen, they are today in their official acts re tlecting credit upon their states. Witness the sturdy fight that Joe Folk is waging in Missouri against graft of every kind. Look at the bold LaFolette in Wisconsin, and at Deneen in Illinois. Wit ness Govenor Hanley, of Indi ana declaring lie will not ap point a mqo . who drinks to office. Look at the honest and sturdy old-fashioned demo- cratic adminastrations of 1 Douglas in Mas^achusettes and Johnson in Minnesoto. Look at the war which Goven or Hock, of crazy Kansas, is waging against the oil trust and other trusts. And even Govenor Higgins, of New York, named as govenor by the dominant republican par ty solely because he was a ringster and a spoilsman and a henchman of Odell, has ris en in great measure to the honor and dignity of his posi tion, and has proved that he possesses in great measure courage, independence and honesty. And in our national admin istration there has been expo sure and prosecution after prosecution of corrupt officers. In the United States senate alone half a dozen members have been hauled to the bar of justice to account for crooked doings. The spirit of honesty and of economy, of reform and of the destruction of graft is abroad in the land. All our people, of high rank and low degree alike, are joining in the chase after the grafters. This is a sign of the times that augurs well for our nation and for our people. The Alphabet of Success. , A practical and helpful gift from a parent to a son would be the following alphabetical list of maxims, printed or written as a heading to a calendar, or framed and hung to tho wall of his room. It is said that Baron Rothschild had these maxims fraimed and hung in his house. Attend carefully to the details of >our buisness. Bo prompt in all things. Consider well and then decide positively. Dare to do right, fear to do wrong. Endure trials patiently. Go not into the society of the vicious. Hold integrity sacred. Injure not anothers reputation or buisness. Join hands with the virtuous. Keep your mind from evil thoughts. • Lie not for any consideration. Make few acquaintances. Never try to appear what you are not. Observe good manners. Pay your debts promptly. Question not tho veracity of a friend. Res poet tho counsel of your parents. Sacrifice money rather than principle. Touch not, take not, handle not intoxicating drinks- Use your leisure time for im provement, Venture not upon the threshold of wrong. Watch carefully over your pas sions. a kindly Extend to every one salutation. Zealously labor for right. And success is certain. When you want a pleasant laxative that la easy to take and certain to act. use (Ihaniheriian'H stomach and liver tablets. For rale by A. J Cooper. If people had to work as hard performing their duty as they do getting their fun, the whole world would go on a strike. One Dollar Saved Represents Ten Dol lars Earned. The average man does not save to ex. rent ten |er cent of his earnings. He must spend nine dollars In living expenses fore very dollsr saved. That being the case he cannot he too carefnl about un necessary expenses. Very often' a few cents properly invested, like buying seeds-, fhr Ills garden, will save several dollars, outlay later on. It is the same in buying Chamberlann’s colic, cholera and diar rhoea remedy. It costs hut a few cents, and a bottle of it in the house often saves a doctoi’a bill of several dollars. For sale- by A. J. Coopin'. The. money a man spends ilk drinking and smoking would buy something else just as fool ish and much less enjoyable. Do Witt's Witch Hazel Salve pene trates the pores of the skin, and by its antiseptic, rubifocient and healing influence It sulnlues lnflamatiou and cures boils, burns, cuts,eczema,tetter, ring worm and all skin diseases. A specific for blind, bleeding, itching- and protuding piles. The original and genuine Witch Hazel Salve is made by E. C. DeWitt A Co., and is sold by A. J. Cooper. A man begins to be old when, no matter how crazy he is over a woman, he can’t sit out in the moonlight with her without wor rying about whether he is catch ing cold.